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February 23, 2017
Start Date:
February 18, 2017
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Detailed item info
Album FeaturesUPC:888751738713Artist:David BowieFormat:VinylRelease Year:2016Record Label:ISOGenre:Art Rock, Rock & Pop
Track Listing
1. Blackstar
2. Tis a Pity She Was a Whore
3. Lazarus
4. Sue
5. Girl Loves Me
6. Dollar Days
7. I Can't Give Everything Away
DetailsDistributor:Sony Music EntertainmentSPAR Code:n/a
Album Notes
It's
difficult to separate 2016's Blackstar from The Next Day, the album
David Bowie released with little warning in 2013. Arriving after a
ten-year drought, The Next Day pulsated with the shock of the new -- as
Bowie's first album of new material in a decade, how could it not? --
but ultimately it was grounded in history, something its cover made
plain in its remix of Heroes artwork. Blackstar occasionally recalls
parts of Bowie's past -- two of its key songs, "Sue (Or in a Season of
Crime)" and "'Tis a Pity She Was a Whore," were even aired in 2014 as a
supporting single for the Nothing Has Changed compilation (both are
revamped for this album) -- but Bowie and producer Tony Visconti are
unconcerned with weaving winking postmodern tapestries; now that they've
shaken free their creative cobwebs, they're ready to explore.
Certainly, the luxurious ten-minute sprawl of "Blackstar" -- a two-part
suite stitched together by string feints and ominous saxophone --
suggests Bowie isn't encumbered with commercial aspirations, but
Blackstar neither alienates nor does it wander into uncharted territory.
For all its odd twists, the album proceeds logically, unfolding with
stately purpose and sustaining a dark, glassy shimmer. It is music for
the dead of night but not moments of desolation; it's created for the
moment when today is over but tomorrow has yet to begin. Fittingly, the
music itself is suspended in time, sometimes recalling the hard urban
gloss of '70s prog -- Bowie's work, yes, but also Roxy Music and,
especially, the Scott Walker of Nite Flights -- and sometimes evoking
the drum'n'bass dabbling of the '90s incarnation of the Thin White Duke,
sounds that can still suggest a coming future, but in the context of
this album these flourishes are the foundation of a persistent present.
This comfort with the now is the most striking thing about Blackstar: it
is the sound of a restless artist feeling utterly at ease not only
within his own skin but within his own time. To that end, Bowie
recruited saxophonist Donny McCaslin and several of his New York cohorts
to provide the instrumentation (and drafted disciple James Murphy to
contribute percussion on a pair of cuts), a cast that suggests Blackstar
goes a bit farther out than it actually does. Cannily front-loaded with
its complicated cuts (songs that were not coincidentally also released
as teaser singles), Blackstar starts at the fringe and works its way
back toward familiar ground, ending with a trio of pop songs dressed in
fancy electronics. These don't erase the heaviness of the opening
quartet but such a sequencing suggests Blackstar is difficult when the
main pleasure of the record is how utterly at ease it all feels: Bowie's
joy in emphasizing the art in art-pop is palpable and its elegant,
unhurried march resonates deeply. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
I took a few pictures of the back cover, trying to avoid excessive glare.
Contact me with any questions